Ferguson: We were lucky to draw

11 March 2013 06:47

Sir Alex Ferguson has admitted Manchester United are lucky to still be in the FA Cup.

United swept into an early two-goal lead against Chelsea at Stamford Bridge, only to crumble after the interval. Eden Hazard and Ramires pulled the visitors level and only a crucial late save from David de Gea kept United in the competition. They now face a trip to Stamford Bridge if they are to book a semi-final meeting with Manchester City at Wembley.

"We are lucky to still be in the FA Cup," said Ferguson.

"We ran out of legs. Our two full-backs, Rafael and Patrice Evra, were knackered and the two centre midfield players tired badly and we kept giving the ball away.

"I detected there were some signs of tiredness. You have to understand the problem is the emotion and intensity of Tuesday night had taken its toll on one or two of the players. Understandably I have no problems with that part but it made it a long day for us and they were by far the better team in the second half."

Typically given how much the focus had been on him, Wayne Rooney followed Javier Hernandez's early effort by curling home a free-kick which Petr Cech had expected to be cleared. At that point United seemed to be cruising. But a couple of missed opportunities gave the visitors' hope and Chelsea looked more likely winners at the end.

"We could have been four up in the first 25 minutes," said Ferguson. "Wayne and Javier's goalscoring has been great this season. We needed that because by the end of the first half I detected our legs were starting to go. It was a very good save by David de Gea near the end. If they had scored then we were out there would have been no doubt about that."

Chelsea boss Rafael Benitez insisted that Chelsea deserved to win having come from two goals down. He said: "We analysed the game and we deserved to win. The first half we made two mistakes and conceded two goals but in the second half we were on top of them and had a lot of chances so it was a good game."

The Spaniard admitted bringing on Hazard and John Obi Mikel had changed the match in Chelsea's favour - Hazard responded almost immediately with a brilliant goal.

He said: "We knew that we had to change something and we knew Hazard is a player with quality who can make a difference and he had fresh legs as well. I asked Frank (Lampard) to give 100 per cent until then and he did. You have to manage the squad. We saw the character and the reaction that I was expecting so until the end of the season we will be fighting."